Timothy George Lectures

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Timothy George is on campus today and tomorrow giving lectures in chapel. To be honest, I was unfamiliar with the gentleman prior to hearing about his coming to SEBTS to deliver lectures. This says more about me than it does about him for today was a fantastic recap of the Reformation era in a lecture entitled Five Revolutions of the Reformation Era. The five revolutions corresponded to five well-known men of yesteryear:

  1. Copernicus -posited heliocentricity contra geocentricity; Luther theocentricity contra anthropocentricity
  2. Christopher Columbus – “Christopher” = “Christ bearer” (Greek); charting new geography displaced eurocentricity; that we would be Christ bearers (“Christophers”)
  3. Gutenberg and his printing press – years later, Baptists in love with printing Bibles and publishing translations
  4. Erasmus and his Greek New Testament – ad fontes approach; “do penance” (Vulgate) vs. “repentance” (GNT)
  5. Luther and the rediscovery of the gospel – justification through faith alone in Christ alone (to be elaborated on tomorrow)

It doesn’t appear that the lecture is online yet, or else you would have a link pointing to it in place of this sentence. George did mention that the lecture today would be the first chapter in a forthcoming book; consequently, it’s possible that the lecture might not be posted online and you’ll just have to wait for the book.

Update: Lecture 1 and Lecture 2 for download. [HT: Denny Burk]

2 responses to “Timothy George Lectures”

  1. Mark Wyatt Avatar

    “Copernicus -posited heliocentricity contra geocentricity”

    Perhaps, but do you realize that heliocentricity, though presumed and believed (dogmatically I may add), has not been demonstrated? In fact, many of our observations and experiments indicate that we are centrally located, and not moving. Of course science has developed ways to reconcile these issues with their assumptions, and this reconciliation relates directly to why science now claims that matter shrinks, time dilates, space warps, etc.

    You should check out the two volume set Galileo Was Wrong, The Church Was Right.

    God Bless,

    Mark Wyatt

  2. Drew Maust Avatar

    Thanks for stopping by and posting!

    I’m afraid your quarrel, however, is with Dr. George, science, and Copernicus, good sir knight. I was very interested to see that there is an apologetic work on geocentricism since this is hardly an issue in evangelical Christianity.

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